CPT Cancer

A journal about the intersection of military life, cancer, and being a single dad.

Treatment Part 5

Stephen Hawking Vibes

Well, it finally happened, I lost my powers of speech and swallowing. The pain in my throat feels exactly as advertised: a really bad sunburn inside your throat, coupled with thick saliva that seeks to choke you at every opportunity. Ain’t life grand?

Cancer, especially the brand I have, is very hard on basic tasks required to exist on this plane of reality. Now couple that with the inability to communicate verbally and you have a wonderful cocktail of “everything about my life is unnecessarily complicated and frustrating.”

Once I realized this would be my reality for the foreseeable future I went to work finding a free app that would enable me to Stephen Hawking my way through life. Fortunately I found one, and the only annoying part of it is it randomly injects full-volume ads after I say something. The inconvenience of being slightly handicapped is sponsored by Kayak!

Aside from communicating like Dr. Hawking, I have also tried to get by on charades and oh boy let me tell you I’m awful at charades or my mom is, possibly both, but it’s a bad combination either way. There is a lot of friction between us that comes from my inability to freely express myself in an articulate, nuanced way and it makes both of our lives a little harder than they need to be.

This is where things stand with me: getting worse a little bit more every single day. There are moments where it’s a little unbearable. Like the random sensation in my throat that will just decide to tickle my gag reflex endlessly for an hour at a time, dry heaving after spending an hour in the car on the way to proton therapy, generally fatigue and weakness from not being able to get enough nutrition, take your pick really.

As I type this I’m receiving a “hydration treatment” at the Army hospital that’s going to become every other day or daily for the next few weeks because I’m not getting nearly enough water through my feeding tube due to aforementioned reasons. Aside from just needing water to live normally, my medications and treatments actively dry me out because they are hard on the ol’ kidneys and liver. Once I can swallow again this becomes a non-issue, but losing the ability to even swallow water has been a huge setback to how my body is handling everything I’m throwing at it,

I mentioned that I’m not getting enough nutrition, which is also true. To just normally exist I need roughly 2,500 calories, and add in radiation and that probably goes up a little. This means I need roughly six cartons of my feeding formula to maintain my weight. I’m averaging three per day. The laws of thermodynamics can tell us that this is not ideal. I’ve dropped about 25 pounds since treatment began, but most of those I’ve dropped in the last two weeks when I lost the ability to swallow anything. That means I lost the 20 I gained in preparation for all that, plus five. I’m now a few pounds below my normal “walking around” weight. I’m not alarmed just yet because from about 2004-2008 I walked around at 165 at my current height, so anything below that and my own internal alarm bells will start to go off. Obviously when I begin recovery I want to return to my normal 185, but my motivation will be as much health as it will be to get this damn feeding tube out. Once I get the feeding tube out that’s when I know the real road to recovery and normalcy begins.

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All the things left unsaid

Being unable to speak for someone like me that isn’t shy to hold down a conversation not only frustrates me when it comes to my basic survival situation, but now my only method of catharsis is talking to people with the little black sadness device we are all addicted to in our pockets. I know this is not healthy long term, but I am aware of it enough to know that when I can regain normal speaking function that I will take a long detox from my phone.

Throughout this ordeal, while shut into my house, I’ve had a lot of time to think. Introspection is good, and probably not a common enough phenomena in the world. Looking back, dissecting old problems or situations, and trying to learn what could have been changed or improved upon or how to grow from those experiences are all important parts of being a healthy responsible person. That said, when you are physically helpless to do anything other than be a hostage in your own body for an indeterminate amount of time, unable to maneuver in your own life because your time is not really your own, a little too much introspection can be dangerous. It can lead to anger, which compounds the frustration.

Most of my anger and resentment stems from my marriage and divorce, and how I’m able to look back and feel like such an idiot for not fighting harder. At the moment I felt pretty good given the situation I was presented with, but looking back I was salvaging a situation that could have gone so much differently, a situation I let boil to the point that it got to because of misconceived notions of honor and fairness. I once again let myself be manipulated and nearly paid a much higher price than I ended up paying for that error. 

Hindsight is 20/20, obviously, and a time machine would be great right about now, but it takes a lot of energy I don’t have to not lash out at my ex and return the same energy she’s been giving me over the last 18 plus months since I asked her for a divorce and we began our separation. And then I spend a lot of energy being mad at myself for being such a fool, for not learning from others, for being stubborn and set in my ideas that it could be different if I just took the high road. 

Taking the high road is the worst thing you can do in a divorce is the lesson I learned, it makes you vulnerable to exploitation by the other party. There is unlikely to be a next time, but if there is, I’ll be ready long before that point. The other benefit of limitless time and access to the internet is the boundless legal and financial education you can give yourself free of charge out of sheer boredom and/or determination. I’ll be ready.

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The end is in sight

I’ve spent a long time pondering my future, not just raging about the past, as I start to set my sights on my last treatment. My last dose of chemo is next Tuesday and my last proton session is next Friday. I’m on the cusp of putting this part of the journey behind me, so I can’t help but think of the “what’s next” and pester my medical team relentlessly about that subject.

Here’s what I know: 

  • About 2-4 weeks after my last treatment I should start to heal and regain my speech and swallow functions, which should also mean I can come off my pain meds (I’m taking enough legal drugs to melt a urinalysis cup right now thanks to my heroic bodily tolerance of opioids). Once I can truly swallow liquids again pain-free then that can kick off rehydration and nutrition in a meaningful way that doesn’t involve going in for hydration treatments or relying solely on the tube for feedings.
  • I will, ostensibly, regain my ability to taste slowly over the next year, starting with sweets, sours and then eventually salts and spicys. I wish that order was reversed, but it is what it is. I can power through no taste, however, that wasn’t a problem for me earlier in the treatment. Once I’m eating solids again it really is game over for being underweight, being able to taste just helps that process along. Some of the feedback I’ve seen is that the salt and spicy may never fully return, which is sad, but I’m hoping that’s not true in my case. There is nothing I can do to impact this one way or the other.
  • Once I haven’t used the tube to feed for 6 weeks AND maintain a healthy weight, the tube and port can come out. I cannot tell you how much this would mean to me. It is a huge confidence drag and physical limitation.
  • My stamina and fatigue should return to about 80% off normal levels within a year, with incremental improvements. I’m told I’ll never be truly 100% but this is something I can impact through rehabilitation, diet, and exercise. I hope all the little clinics responsible for rehabing me are ready, I’m packing a lunch and plan on wearing their asses out. I simply do not accept being a lesser version of myself after this is done.
  • Now for arguably the most important detail: surveillance. I get my first PET scan at around three months, where they fully expect to have nothing conclusive because the tumor sites will still be active and toxic from the effects of radiation. At six months this is also the basic expectation, but it’s possible to show a clearer picture. One year after the end of treatment is when we really expect to know what’s what. That’s when we’ll get a clear picture if there’s anything active inside me and if not, great, I begin annual surveillance scans. After five years of no cancer I’m “cured.” If something pops hot, well there’s a lot of “it depends” – mostly on location and what kind of treatment based on that. If it does come back or has spread since the start of treatment, the most likely place is to my lungs. The MedOnc thinks this is actually not a complication that should scare me as he says surgery to remove tumors from the lungs seems fairly straight forward. I’ll maintain a healthy amount of hope that I don’t have to find out for myself.

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Robot Dad

My son is three and a half and has a speech delay that he’s been going to a program three times a week to work on so he can be ready for pre-K next year and/or the year after. Now imagine his dad is talking to him using a robot voice on a cell phone and hand and arm signals that would make Dick Winters proud.

He actually did pretty well, shockingly well. In fact, both my kids were able to adapt remarkably easy to dad’s new reality. I am pretty proud of the resilience these two have shown over the last two years, they’ve been handed tough circumstances not of their making and have shown time and again they have so much potential to rise above it.

My daughter took a walk with my mom around the neighborhood and made many wishes on dandelion seed puffs “I hope daddy feels better soon” because I know she misses the version of me that was fun, energetic, and mobile. I miss that version of me too, sweetheart…

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The views and opinions presented herein are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the views of the Department of Defense or the U.S. Army.